Sweeping reforms: China to abolish labor camps, ease one-child policy

China has issued a detailed reform roadmap, which promises to abolish the controversial labor camp system and allow some families to have two children instead of one. The reforms are part of a plan to stimulate the decelerating Chinese economy.

Several key decisions were made at this week’s gathering of top
Chinese Communist Party leaders, known as the Third Plenum, the
official Xinhua news agency said on Friday.

As part of the new “comprehensively deepening” reforms
drafted in the official policy document, the Communist Party
promised to close down its labor camps and abandon the
controversial practice.

The Chinese ‘reeducation through labor’ system, which has been
around since the 1950s, allows police to imprison petty criminals
in labor camps for up to four years without trial. Operating
outside the Chinese legal system, these labor camps have long
been a subject of criticism because they allow police to issue
and set sentences with no judicial control.

“There have been many methods used recently by this government
that are against the rule of law, and do not respect human
rights, or freedom of speech,” Pu Zhiqiang, a prominent
Beijing lawyer who represented several former labor camp
detainees seeking compensation, told AP. But abolishing labor
camps represents some “progress,” making it “much
harder” for the Chinese police to clamp down on people, he
believes.

Another policy-changing decision, stated in the official document
aims, to ease the strict one-child rule for Chinese families. The
family planning law will now let couples have two children if one
of the parents is an only child.

China’s family planning policy was first introduced in 1979 to
limit the surging population of the largest nation in the world.
Until now it has restricted parents living in urban areas to
having one child, allowing one more child for rural families
whose first born was a girl.

However, now China apparently needs to respond to the problem of
a rapidly ageing population, which, according to projections,
could start depriving it of its workforce by 2025. Analysts have
argued the one-child policy has already shrunk China’s labor
pool, hurting economic growth. In 2012, the Chinese working age
population – which is about 930 million – fell for the first time
in decades.

The document, presented as a wide reform roadmap, introduced a
range of social and economic changes encouraging integration of rural and
urban China and stimulating the private sector. It comes as
Chinese leaders are looking for means of unleashing new sources
of growth for the country’s economy. The latter is expected to
grow 7.5 percent this year, which for China is the slowest pace
for 23 years.

Among the measures outlined, China would reform its
administrative law enforcement system, scrap residency
restrictions in small cities and townships, integrate urban and
rural social security systems and push forward with an
environmental tax.

“The reforms are unprecedented,” Xu Hongcai, senior
economist at the China Centre for International Economic
Exchanges think tank, told Reuters. “Reforms in the 1990s were
limited to some areas, now reforms are all-round.”